Farm Progress

Are the variable costs in farming, really variable?

Dan Frieberg 1

September 28, 2016

3 Min Read

Do you ever consider why there is so much focus on producing ever higher yields per acre?

What’s your reason why you focus on yields?

Is it a feeling of social responsibility to help feed the world? Is it from a sense of pride?

Winning a contest? Are you wired to achieve – a constant quest to do better?

Is it a leftover from your school days or parenting - always wanting to have a great report card?

For most growers that we work with, I don’t believe any of those motivations are what’s most important. They’re generally pretty quiet about their high yields. For them, it comes down to a simple business reality – high yields generally drive the most profit.

Business and economics professors have ingrained in us that some business costs are fixed and some are variable. Fixed costs are the same regardless of units produced. Sometimes, they are referred to as “sunk” costs because it’s what you sink into the business just to be in business. In crop production, we frequently consider our investment in land – either though ownership or rent – as our largest fixed cost.

Over the decades, we’ve replaced labor with larger equipment that has helped fuel dramatic productivity gains. But that increasing investment has increased the fixed cost of crop production in many operations.

Farm economics professors will frequently list nutrients, seed, crop protection products, fuel and hired labor as variable costs.  But for most operations, that’s not an accurate characterization. What percent of seed cost is truly variable? What percent of herbicide costs is truly variable? What percent of nitrogen cost is truly variable?

My point is that everyone plants hybrid corn – so the real seed cost that is variable is the portion above the cost of a high-yield, non-traited hybrid. In corn production, most growers are going to apply a minimum of 100 lbs.of N per acre in some manner.

The portion of your nitrogen investment that is truly variable might be the final 50-75 lbs./acre. Choosing the cheapest herbicide program can be an example of “playing with fire” (boosting weed resistance for higher future costs). So is your herbicide program really a variable cost?

Lenders can be quick to encourage cost-cutting. But cutting nutrient, plant health and pest management investments can cut yields. In a high fixed-cost business, dividing those fixed costs over more units of production is usually the path to higher profits.

We frequently lead our customers to spend more input dollars only on the best field zones. That is possible when you can track and record those cost/investment differences like we do, then share a profitability analysis (see graphic) at the end of the growing season.

In corn and soybean production, you can spend your way poor but you can’t save your way into prosperity. Frequently, the only way to lower your cost per bushel and increase profits is to produce higher yields.

About the Author(s)

Dan Frieberg 1

Premier Crop Systems

Dan Frieberg is CEO of Premier Crop Systems, LLC a crop data-analysis company based in West Des Moines, Iowa. For more information on Premier Crop Systems or data-driven decisions, visit www.premiercrop.com. Premier Crop Systems will push you to dig more deeply into your field data and find just how much power lies in the information layers that hide within your acres.

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